17 exams were graded. Mean = 25, average = 25.0588235294118, std = 4.6296677558343
Local students can pick up your finals outside Prof. Engler's office (Gates 314)
(1) The Final is on Friday, Dec 9th. It's cumulative, open book/notes.
(2) The last homework is due Wed, Dec7th before class. Read the hints paper, and find five examples where the hints are obeyed or disobeyed from the papers we read this quarter. Local students bring the papers to class. SCPD students post your homework to cs240-aut0506-staff@lists.stanford.edu
20 exams were graded. Mean = 28, average = 28.2, std = 5.66243391967949
(1) Quiz 2 will be on Friday, Nov 18th
(2) Post your quiz questions, one for each paper since Quiz 1 (excluding the network normalizer paper), to the class newsgroup(su.class.cs240) by Wed, Nov 16, 11:59PM.
(3) Here are some sample exams: questions and answers. Note that you are responsible for figuring out which answers correspond to which questions. Quiz 2 with answers from Winter 2005. More samples can be found through previous years' websites.
Quiz 2 will be on Friday, Nov 18th. The final exam will be on Friday, Dec 9th
So far, 18 exams were graded. Here are some statistics: mean = 32, average = 32.1111111111111, std = 9.29192495024824
Due to unknown delays, SCPD exams just came in today (Thu, 11/3). We are going to grade them ASAP.
(1) The first Quiz (Midterm) will be on Monday, Oct. 24th, in class, open book but close laptop. SCPD students do not need to come to campus to take the exam.
(2) Post your quiz questions, one for each paper, up to and including the two failure oblivious papers to the newsgroup (su.class.cs240) by Thursday, Oct. 20 11:59PM.
(3) Friday, Oct.21 will be a review session. Bring your quiz questions to the review session.
(4) Here are some sample questions and answers culled from the previous quarters' quizzes. Note that you are responsible for figuring out which answers correspond to which questions. Also check out Quiz 1 with answers from last Spring.
Students will study advanced operating system topics and be exposed to recent developments in operating systems research. This course involves readings and lectures on classic and new papers. Topics: virtual memory management, synchronization and communication, file systems, protection and security, operating system structure and extension techniques, fault tolerance, and history and experience of systems programming.
To contact the staff, please send email to cs240-aut0506-staff@lists.stanford.edu and prefix the subject line with "CS240" for a prompt response. Announcements from the staff will be sent via the cs240-aut0506-students@lists.stanford.edu mailing list to which any registered student will automatically be added.
The prerequisite for this class is CS 140 (previously CS 240A) or the equivalent. It is necessary to have this background before taking the class, as we'll read a lot papers quickly without much time for catching up on the basics. The course assumes an understanding of topics in operating systems such as synchronization, virtual memory management, scheduling, and file systems.
The other requirement is that students be able to send and receive email, access the class newsgroup, access the class web page, and download and print postscript from the class web page. There will be very few handouts in the course, since most of the notes and other materials will be available only on the class web page.
The course consists of lectures, readings, and three exams. As the quarter progresses there may be ways to get extra credit. The two most important things to know about the class: (1) the main goal is to have interesting in-class discussions and (2) we recommend you read each paper at least twice, preferably more than a day in advance so that it sinks in.
Most of the work in this course consists of reading journal and conference papers. We will cover one paper for each class meeting. This class will be primarily discussion based (rather than organized around lectures). Active discussion will (hopefully) give you a non-trivial understanding of the material. The only way this approach can work is if you read the papers carefully. To encourage this, 40% of your class grade will come from class participation: this includes talking in class, as well as how you do on pop quizzes and (possibly) pop presentations. Class time will not be used to rehash the material in the papers. Instead, it will be used to highlight the important points and discuss some of the more interesting features. There will be as much as 10-15 hours of reading per week. Do not take this course unless you are willing and able to do a lot of reading.
There is no textbook for this course. The course is based on a collection of journal and conference papers that describe the history and state of the art in operating systems. Papers will be discussed in class in approximately the order that they appear on the reading list. You must read the papers before class. At a minimum we recommend two close readings. We will provide most papers online; those that are only available in hardcopy will be provided about a week before they are needed.
The class is graded on a rough curve with an average grade being a B+. 40% of your grade will come from class participation, the other 60% will be based on two midterm exam scores and the final exam score. All three exams count. SCPD students will be graded just on exams (and any homeworks).
Two midterm exams and a final exam will be given in class. They will be open book (but not open laptop). The midterm exams are not cumulative, but the final exam is cumulative. A sample exam will be available along with sample solutions. Review sessions will be held before each exam.
There is a class newsgroup, su.class.cs240, that can be used by members of the class to converse with each other. All course announcements will be put on to the class web page. The news group is a good place to advertise for study groups, ask questions of other students, etc.
This course makes no attempt to cover all the interesting topics in operating systems. Instead, we will cover a few topics in depth. The course is divided into the following general topic areas:
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